Yes, I admit that the topic of reparations has been discussed both in the Netherlands and in France too.
Nevertheless, going back to my original point, Portuguese America actually was by far the biggest slave importer, accounting for 38.5 % of the Atlantic slave trade, followed by the British West Indies with 18.4 %, the Spanish colonies with 17.5 %, the French West Indies with 13.6 %, British North America with 9.7 %, the Dutch West Indies with 2 %, and the Danish West Indies with only 0.3 %. Yet, slave reparations is an issue which, as far as I know, has never been seriously raised either in Brazil or in the Spanish-speaking countries, and is a debate that is more commonly associated with English-speaking (or secondarily French or Dutch-speaking) countries in the Caribbean. Why?
Britain put significant pressure on Brazil to abolish slavery, and there was also very strong support in Britain for the Abolitionist movement in the US.
Maybe it's the way history went: the Spanish colonies became independent long before the British colonies did, and there was no significant immigration from South America to Spain and Portugal in the way that there was from Africa to Britain and France and from the West Indies to Britain. Or maybe it's an internal thing: the middle-class left wing in Britain now takes the view that everything about the British Empire was evil, and even that schoolkids should be taught this, whereas I don't think that there's a similar school of thought in Spain and Portugal.
I'm not sure why it's directed at the Royals. OK, they are the symbol and personification of the UK, but a lot of people's ancestors benefited far more from slavery than the Royal Family did, and Prince Albert was a prominent abolitionist.
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